Subscribe to this blog

Follow by Email

Way of Kings Readalong: Wrap-up

So it's finally over. That was an amazing book! Thank you everyone for joining in and making my first readalong so much fun :)

I have said over and over again that Brandon Sanderson is a storytelling god. This book makes me believe it even more fiercely - it takes a mastermind to create such intricate worlds and piece together so many character and plot threads. He does such a great job of feeding you just enough answers/revelations to keep you happy, but keeps you hanging by dangling all sorts of questions for you to answer. Not to mention the bombshells he throws in at the end...

Having read Mistborn, I really should have been more prepared for disaster and mindblowing moments towards the end of the book. The end was just bombshell after bombshell - some were interesting revelations, and others were shattering.

The bombshells of this week:

1) Navani proves that Dalinar's visions are real, and says his unconscious decoding of an ancient language will help pave the way for much more understanding of the past. Pretty cool!

Also, does Navani and Dalinar getting together count as a bombshell? Considering all the outrage, let's say yes.

2) Sadeas pretends to humor Dalinar and ally with him, only to turn around and betray him. He retreats along with all his bridgemen, leaving Dalinar, Adolin, and his men stranded on the plains in the midst of the Parshendi.

But....

Kaladin and co. save the day by running in and providing a bridge, sacrificing their chance of escape in the process. Kaladin discovers his immense stormlight-induced capabilities and practically takes on half the Parshendi single handedly. In thanks, Dalinar appoints Kaladin and the rest of Bridge 4 as his personal guard (after an epic showdown with Sadeas, of course).

2) Syl is an Honorspren! She binds things, like oaths. Now that question of whether Spren are attracted to something or cause something comes up again, because when Syl first met Kaladin he was in a piteous state - definitely not what I'd call honorable. But as he became more and more courageous and honorable, Syl grew and changed as well. So they're connected, but who is causing the changes?

3) Shallan discovers the truth of Jasnah's soulcaster. It's a fake! Both Shallan and Jasnah possess the inherent power to soulcast, and Jasnah promises to start teaching Shallan more about her research and Shadesmar.

4) Szeth discovers his master, and it's at that nice healer king, Trevangian. Except Trevangian isn't as nice or foolish as Jasnah has been leading us to believe - he bleeds people to death in large batches so that he can collect and make sense of their dying words (those epigraphs from Parts 1 and 4). SICKENING. And Trevangian wants Dalinar dead...

5) Jasnah's bombshell about the Voidbringers: "They claim we chased the Voidbringers off the face of Roshar or destroyed them. But that's not how humans work. We don't throw away something we can use."

I feel really dense for not putting this together while Shallan's mind was reeling with "beings of ash and fire". This took me completely off guard - the Voidbringers were enslaved as Parshmen! This can't end well, especially not with the so-called Odium coming...

Oh, and Shallan's bombshell - her father was part of a group of people who wanted Jasnah's research for their own (sinister) means.

6) Dalinar has a vision of the Almighty, who says he is dead and has been killed by Odium. KILLED. And by the looks of it, a long time ago.

7) And of course, Wit. He makes a bunch of cryptic pronouncements and then Talenel'Elin, A HERALD, appears as says the Desolation has come. According to Wit, he is too late. So the Desolation has started already? WHAT IS COMING?

My Thoughts:

I'm still recovering from a lot of those bombshells, but I'm so excited to read Words of Radiance and get some answers.

The "Almighty" mentions another power, Cultivation. That instantly brought to mind Ruin and Preservation - so whatever power "Almighty" is, it is probably something that balances Cultivation. And the fact that it's dead...that just can't be good. I'm very curious as to what this power is and the effect its absence has on Roshar. It should theoretically affect the ability of people to manipulate magic, if this is following a similar pattern as Mistborn. In that case, is Kaladin channeling "the Almighty" now that he has found his surgebinding abilities?

I'm also struck by the fact that the Voidbringers are the parshmen. So they aren't those giant rock creatures from the prelude? Or is that a more ancient form of the parshmen? Clearly the parshmen make formidable foes when they decide to turn, as evidenced by the difficulty of the Alethi armies to fend off the "primitive" Parshendi. Kaladin makes it clear that the Parshendi fight more honorably and respectfully than the Alethi, so does that mean they are the counterpoints to the Radiants (and their descendants)?

Honor seems to be a really big deal in Roshar. Syl is an Honorspren. Kaladin and Dalinar always strive to do the honorable thing ("Why did your bridge crew come for us? Why, really?" "Why did you give up your Shardblade?"). Sadeas makes some cheap comment about how that honor of Dalinar's will get him killed. Szeth is ashamed of his killing people because of how dishonorable it is to slaughter the innocents, and yet he justifies it by saying he is "Truthless" - ironically, isn't Truthless dishonorable in itself? How can one evil ever justify countless more? It seems that despite its importance, there aren't actually that many honorable people on Roshar. Perhaps that's why Syl found Kaladin in the first place - she sensed that he, at his core, was honorable. Now that Dalinar has a plan to "take the toys away from the children" I think it will force the rest of the Alethi to find that honor in themselves. I don't really know where I'm going with this, but somehow I feel like recovering honor among everyone on Roshar will help defeat Odium. Whatever that is.

I think the revelation I found most shocking was that Taravangian was behind Szeth's assassination spree. He seems like he is ashamed of what he is doing, but he's taking a "The ends justify the means" approach - this is in such stark contrast to Kaladin, who believes how you do things is just as important as the final result. Is it worth killing thousands of innocents in order to save the rest of humanity? I'm immediately reminded of Kira Walker from the Partials series, who always insists that how you save humanity matters, because in the end we must still be worth saving. The scariest thing is when you realize how earnest he is. He hates having to kill and drain the blood of his people, but he is so unyielding to Szeth's objections because he truly believes this is the best (and only) way to save Roshar.

Also can I just say that I'm half psychic because I totally called Kaladin having to save Dalinar and the Alethi troops with his magical new powers last week. Ok, so he wasn't defending them from Szeth, but the irony still stands!

Other Stuff to Check Out:

Tor put out an article a while ago where Sanderson answered some questions about the Stormlight Archive. It's pretty cool - you can check it out here.

What are your final reactions? Any speculation about what's coming? Is Words of Radiance going to explode my brain with even more bombshells (I think I already know the answer to that one...)?

Comments

"How you do things is just as important as the final result." - If you were following along with the actual book of Way of Kings in the story, that's precisely the message that the author was trying to convey. He could have gotten to Urithiru in the blink of an eye or much more easily. Even the route he chose by using roads could have been done much easier if he had allowed everyone else to treat him like the king he was and accepted the help, but he didn't. He wanted to put himself in the shoes of his people. The people that were trusting him to rule them well. And they end up saying that the journey is just or more important than the ending itself. It's the journey that shapes you and makes you who you are, not the the final destination, because in the end, we all end up in the same place.

That whole recovering honor for all of Roshar is an intriguing idea. And yeah I had the same thoughts about Cultivation, Almighty and Ruin and Preservation. It definitely has it's similarities, but we have just scratched the surface.

The answers (or most of them anyway) to Szeth's Truthless problem in Words of Radiance made me want to kill all of Shinovar lol. I love Szeth, I can't help it xD

Wow! Quite an ending! You're right that there was just one revelation after another, most of which I didn't see coming. (Like you, I did predict that Kaladin would save Dalinar at some point, though.) I was blown away by the fact that the Parshmen are the Voidbringers. That is going to bring all sorts of mayhem! I'm a bit sad at the revelation that the Almighty is dead - But maybe he can still be reached somehow? He somehow managed to send the message even after he was killed, right (though it seems it was sent a long time ago). We shall see!!

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Okay friends, strap in, this is going to be quite a rant about cultural appropriation and all the interactions that have been bothering me lately. I am just sick of hearing from my (predominantly white) friends how indignation at cultural appropriation is so "extra" and unnecessary, so here is my attempt to explain through my south Asian/desi lens exactly what I consider to be cultural appropriation and why it bugs me.
Basically it boils down to this: If I get fun of for a certain part of my culture or heritage, but a white person can do the same thing and is applauded for being "boho chic", it's cultural appropriation. If a bunch of white people start profiting off of a part of my culture or start a "trend" without acknowledging the source, that's cultural appropriation too.
Golden Milk Lattes
This beverage has been making the rounds on all the health-focused hipster health blogs, and is essentially an up-cycled version of a traditional Indian h…

Now that we have officially met Zamira Drakasha, I get to talk about her and what makes her so awesome! Somehow I didn't realize that we don't even get to meet her (and Ezri) until over halfway through the book, because most of my memories of Red Seas Under Red Skies involve Zamira and Ezri taking on the world. Both of these characters have a larger than life personality, and somehow once they entered the picture I promptly forgot about the entire first half of the book!

Are woman pirates a thing?
Well, one reader of The Gentleman Bastards series thought having a middle-aged pirate mother as a captain was ridiculous and unrealistic. Scott Lynch's response is pretty great. I'm only quoting a little bit here, but there's a lot more where this came from: You know what? Yeah, Zamira Drakasha, middle-aged pirate mother of two, is a wish-fulfillment fantasy...Shit yes, Zamira Drakasha, leaping across the gap between burning ships with twin sabers in hand to kick in some …